I went through all the hassle of getting a 60 day visa, then at the airport Immigration I only got stamped for 30 days. How can I get my original visa validated?
6,014
views
8
likes
173
all likes
79
replies
1
images
31
users
TLDR : Answer Summary
An expat faced an issue upon arriving in Thailand where they received a 30-day stamp instead of the 60-day visa they had obtained. The advice given includes immediately checking your entry stamp at the airport, returning to the immigration office where stamped if incorrect, and possibly approaching local immigration offices for assistance. Suggestions also include carrying proof of the 60-day visa and considering other stay options like extensions. Comments reveal mixed personal experiences regarding the ability to change the stamp after entry.
Next time have the passport opened at the page of visa when you present it ,,or at least check they stamp you in properly ,,so check and know number of page with the correct visa
Joe ******
Always check that the immigration officer stamps you in on your right visa and check the date for length of stay.
Armando **********
Yeah, I pulled the same rookie move. I didn't show them my visa and got 30day stamp. This time I did and got my 60 day tourist stamp. Next time you'll know better.
My passport is full of Thai Tourist Visas (the sticker ones). Sometimes they miss it. Sometimes they just ask, you have visa. 2 days ago I just told the immigration officer that I had a visa and she checked it and stamped me in. My wife was given the 30 day stamp instead of 60 days and she was told by immigration to go back to original place of entry to rectify it.
ah OK, a standard 30 day extension to a tourist or excempt stamp is possible now, but if your planned stay is over 60 days, then you need to bounce out/in to get a new visa beyond the 60 days stay, but you can then utilise the unused 60 day tourist visa. It's 'potluck' whether a local immigration office will amend that 30 day exempt stamp to a 60 day tourist stamp, but the majority of cases have had to return to point of entry to get that amended, which is a ball ache if you're swinging in a hammock on koh Lipe, having arrived in Bangkok. 'All depends on the immigration officer on the day'.
lol. Well everything is down to the immigration officer that you face. Literally 'at their discretion' - some people posting that they managed to get this amended at their local/regional immigration office, where others have had to travel 800 miles back to their port of entry to get it amended. So always dress well, and don't be a dick. Every rule of entry or denied entry can be overlooked by one officer, and played by another, often based on whether you have used/paid an agent to facilitate.
Reply to
Dan ********
Reply
Phil ********
Did you get an e-visa and did you print it off and hand it to the immigration officer with your passport?
If you want you can first stay 30 days, get a visa extension at immigration for another 30 and after that leave the country and come back with your visa printed out and stay another 60 and extend that for 30 days at immigration.
Bad advice. Just because merely 30 days were stamped in the passport does not mean the e-visa wasn’t invalidated in the system at the time of that entry.
Sure. But it might have been “used” at that entry. Exactly my point. It might have been used - and likely so when it was handed over to the IO. Then the IO probably just used the stamp for visa exemption (30 days) instead of the 60 day stamp by mistake.
he didn't have it printed out from how I understand his comments so I say it's more likely that it hasn't been used yet.
But it was only valid until 13th June or something so in his case it wouldn't really help him anyway, he should get back to immigration at the airport to have it corrected there.
Reply to
Henrik **************
Reply
Henrik **************
Have the price increased lately on touristvisas? I had no idea..
I have a house pretty close to the friendship bridge Nong khai - Vientiane so sometimes I arrive on a touristvisa and then just border jump 2 times in a row after my visa runs out (only eligible to do it twice in a calendar year though)
Beware, you need to make sure you enter the second time within the visa validity. On a tourist visa, that's usually within 90 days of visa issue, not from the entry date.
If you have a tourist visa they should change it to reflect the visa. I had this happen to a friend last month at Phuket Intl and he went back and in 20 minutes it was updated.